Lower-priced new cars are gaining popularity, and not just for cash-poor
buyers
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[October 22, 2024] By
TOM KRISHER
DETROIT (AP) — Had she wanted to, Michelle Chumley could have afforded a
pricey new SUV loaded with options. But when it came time to replace her
Chevrolet Blazer SUV, for which she'd paid about $40,000 three years
ago, Chumley chose something smaller. And less costly.
With her purchase of a Chevrolet Trax compact SUV in June, Chumley
joined a rising number of buyers who have made vehicles in the
below-average $20,000-to-$30,000 range the fastest-growing segment of
the nation's new-auto market.
“I just don't need that big vehicle and to be paying all of that gas
money,” said Chumley, a 56-year-old nurse who lives outside Oxford,
Ohio, near Cincinnati.
Across the industry, auto analysts say, an “affordability shift” is
taking root. The trend is being led by people who feel they can no
longer afford a new vehicle that would cost them roughly today’s average
selling price of more than $47,000 — a jump of more than 20% from the
pre-pandemic average.
To buy a new car at that price, an average buyer would have to spend
$737 a month, if financed at today's average loan rate of 7.1%, for just
under six years before the vehicle would be paid off, according to
Edmunds.com, an auto research and pricing site. For many, that is
financially out of reach.
Yet there are other buyers who, like Chumley, could manage the financial
burden but have decided it just isn't worth the cost. And the trend is
forcing America's automakers to reassess their sales and production
strategies. With buyers confronting inflated prices and still-high loan
rates, sales of new U.S. autos rose only 1% through September over the
same period last year. If the trend toward lower-priced vehicles proves
a lasting one, more generous discounts could lead to lower average auto
prices and slowing industry profits.
“Consumers are becoming more prudent as they face economic uncertainty,
still-high interest rates and vehicle prices that remain elevated,” said
Kevin Roberts, director of market intelligence at CarGurus, an
automotive shopping site. “This year, all of the growth is happening in
what we would consider the more affordable price buckets.”
Under pressure to unload their more expensive models, automakers have
been lowering the sales prices on many such vehicles, largely by
offering steeper discounts. In the past year, the average incentive per
auto has nearly doubled, to $1,812, according to Edmunds. General Motors
has said it expects its average selling price to drop 1.5% in the second
half of the year.
Through September, Roberts has calculated, new-vehicle sales to
individual buyers, excluding sales to rental companies and other
commercial fleets, are up 7%. Of that growth, 43% came in the
$20,000-to-$30,000 price range — the largest share for that price
category in at least four years. (For used vehicles, the shift is even
more pronounced: 59% sales growth in the $15,000-to-$20,000 price range
over that period.)
Sales of compact and subcompact cars and SUVs from mainstream auto
brands are growing faster than in any year since 2018, according to data
from Cox Automotive.
The sales gains for affordable vehicles is, in some ways, a return to a
pattern that existed before the pandemic. As recently as 2018, compact
and subcompact vehicles — typically among the most popular moderately
priced vehicles — had accounted for nearly 35% of the nation's new
vehicle sales.
The proportion started to fall in 2020, when the pandemic caused a
global shortage of computer chips that forced automakers to slow
production and allocate scarce semiconductors to more expensive trucks
and large SUVs. As buyers increasingly embraced those higher-priced
vehicles, the companies posted robust earnings growth.
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Michelle Chumley sits in her new Chevrolet Trax compact SUV,
Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024, in West Chester, Ohio. (AP Photo/Jeff
Dean)
In the meantime, they deemed profit
margins for lower-prices cars too meager to justify significant
production of them. By 2022, the market share of compact and
subcompact vehicles had dropped below 30%.
This year, that share has rebounded to nearly 34% and rising. Sales
of compact sedans were up 16.7% through September from 12 months
earlier. By contrast, CarGurus said, big pickups rose just under 6%.
Sales of large SUVs are barely up at all — less than 1%.
Ford's F-Series truck remains the top-selling vehicle in the United
States this year, as it has been for nearly a half-century, followed
by the Chevrolet Silverado. But Stellantis' Ram pickup, typically
No. 3, dropped to sixth place, outpaced by several less expensive
small SUVs: the Toyota RAV4, the Honda CR-V and the Tesla Model Y
(with a $7,500 U.S. tax credit).
The move in buyer sentiment toward affordability came fast this
year, catching many automakers off guard, with too-few vehicles
available in lower price ranges. One reason for the shift, analysts
say, is that many buyers who are willing to plunk down nearly
$50,000 for a new vehicle had already done so in the past few years.
People who are less able — or less willing — to spend that much had
in many cases held on to their existing vehicles for years. The time
had come for them to replace them. And most of them seem disinclined
to spend more than they have to.
With loan rates still high and average auto insurance prices up a
whopping 38% in the past two years, “the public just wants to be a
little more frugal about it,” said Keith McCluskey, CEO of the
dealership where Chumley bought her Trax.
Roberts of CarGurus noted that even many higher-income buyers are
choosing smaller, lower-priced vehicles, in some cases because of
uncertainties over the economy and the impending presidential
election.
The shift has left some automakers overstocked with too many pricier
trucks and SUVs. Some, like Stellantis, which makes Chrysler, Jeep
and Ram vehicles, have warned that the shift will eat into their
profitability this year.
At General Motors' Chevrolet brand, executives had foreseen the
shift away from “uber expensive” vehicles and were prepared with the
redesigned Trax, which came out in the spring of 2023, noted Mike
MacPhee, director of Chevrolet sales operations.
Trax sales in the U.S. so far this year are up 130%, making it the
nation’s top-selling subcompact SUV.
“We’re basically doubling our (Trax) sales volume from last year,”
MacPhee said.
How long the preference for lower-priced vehicles may last is
unclear. Charlie Chesbrough, chief economist for Cox Automotive,
notes that the succession of expected interest rates cuts by the
Federal Rates should eventually lead to lower auto loan rates,
thereby making larger vehicles more affordable.
“The trends will probably start to change if these interest rates
start coming down,” Chesbrough predicted. “We'll see consumers start
moving into these larger vehicles.”
____
AP Economics Writer Christopher Rugaber in Washington contributed to
this report.
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